US7537238B2 - Side airbag - Google Patents
Side airbag Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- US7537238B2 US7537238B2 US09/924,943 US92494301A US7537238B2 US 7537238 B2 US7537238 B2 US 7537238B2 US 92494301 A US92494301 A US 92494301A US 7537238 B2 US7537238 B2 US 7537238B2
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- Prior art keywords
- silicone
- airbag
- portions
- fiber
- junction
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- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B60—VEHICLES IN GENERAL
- B60R—VEHICLES, VEHICLE FITTINGS, OR VEHICLE PARTS, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- B60R21/00—Arrangements or fittings on vehicles for protecting or preventing injuries to occupants or pedestrians in case of accidents or other traffic risks
- B60R21/02—Occupant safety arrangements or fittings, e.g. crash pads
- B60R21/16—Inflatable occupant restraints or confinements designed to inflate upon impact or impending impact, e.g. air bags
- B60R21/23—Inflatable members
- B60R21/231—Inflatable members characterised by their shape, construction or spatial configuration
- B60R21/232—Curtain-type airbags deploying mainly in a vertical direction from their top edge
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- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B60—VEHICLES IN GENERAL
- B60R—VEHICLES, VEHICLE FITTINGS, OR VEHICLE PARTS, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- B60R21/00—Arrangements or fittings on vehicles for protecting or preventing injuries to occupants or pedestrians in case of accidents or other traffic risks
- B60R21/02—Occupant safety arrangements or fittings, e.g. crash pads
- B60R21/16—Inflatable occupant restraints or confinements designed to inflate upon impact or impending impact, e.g. air bags
- B60R21/23—Inflatable members
- B60R21/235—Inflatable members characterised by their material
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- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B60—VEHICLES IN GENERAL
- B60R—VEHICLES, VEHICLE FITTINGS, OR VEHICLE PARTS, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- B60R21/00—Arrangements or fittings on vehicles for protecting or preventing injuries to occupants or pedestrians in case of accidents or other traffic risks
- B60R21/02—Occupant safety arrangements or fittings, e.g. crash pads
- B60R21/16—Inflatable occupant restraints or confinements designed to inflate upon impact or impending impact, e.g. air bags
- B60R21/23—Inflatable members
- B60R21/235—Inflatable members characterised by their material
- B60R2021/23571—Inflatable members characterised by their material characterised by connections between panels
- B60R2021/23585—Vulcanisation
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- Y—GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
- Y10—TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
- Y10T—TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
- Y10T428/00—Stock material or miscellaneous articles
- Y10T428/13—Hollow or container type article [e.g., tube, vase, etc.]
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- Y—GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
- Y10—TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
- Y10T—TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
- Y10T442/00—Fabric [woven, knitted, or nonwoven textile or cloth, etc.]
- Y10T442/20—Coated or impregnated woven, knit, or nonwoven fabric which is not [a] associated with another preformed layer or fiber layer or, [b] with respect to woven and knit, characterized, respectively, by a particular or differential weave or knit, wherein the coating or impregnation is neither a foamed material nor a free metal or alloy layer
- Y10T442/2164—Coating or impregnation specified as water repellent
Definitions
- the present invention relates to airbags for reducing an impact of passengers or occupants against interior vehicle components in the event of side collision of motor vehicles.
- side airbags airbags for reducing an impact of passengers in the event of side collision (refer hereafter to as side airbags) receive attention as means for increasing the security of passengers.
- the side airbags need to restrain passengers with small shape and volume thereof.
- the side airbags or inflatable curtains deploy along a side window and cover the whole or part thereof to prevent passengers from strongly colliding with the side window and the neighborhood thereof.
- the inflatable curtain In order to cover the passenger's head even if the vehicle body rolls due to a side-collision impact, the inflatable curtain needs to have high airtightness to such an extent that no gas leakage occurs from a bag over a few seconds after deployment.
- a bag fabric or cloth for the inflatable curtain is coated with silicone resin or rubber.
- an extremely narrow accommodation space of a pillar and a roof side requires a reduction in bulk and sectional area of a folded bag. If the bag is designed to use a fabric for an earlier-art driver's seat or assistant driver's seat airbag, the accommodation of the folded bag requires partial alteration of the vehicle-body structure design or arrangement of a separate and distinct accommodation unit.
- JP-A 10-129380 discloses a joining method of an outer periphery of a side airbag using a fabric coated with silicone rubber, wherein a sewed portion is sealed with a sealing member to increase the airtightness.
- This method provides an airbag with very tough outer periphery for higher airtightness, which is apt, however, to be rough and hard, and is difficult to reduce a folded volume.
- JP-A 2-114035 discloses an airbag fabric having improved airtightness by laminating thermoplastic elastomer.
- the fabric may cause adhesion between fabric portions or lack of heat resistance to hot gas out of an inflator after leaving the airbag folded during a long period of time.
- JP-A 11-227550 discloses a bonded airbag wherein the periphery of a fabric coated with silicone rubber is joined with a hot-setting silicon-rubber adhesive to have a junction peeling bonding strength of 150 N/25 mm width or more.
- this art relies upon 1) introducing a coating rubber into a texture of the fabric, and 2) enhancing cross-linking and chemical bond between the fabric and a coating layer and between the coating layer and an adhesive by using a specific rubber mixing compound.
- the cured coating rubber and adhesive make the periphery of the fabric significantly rough and hard, scarcely securing a reduced folded volume to be achieved by the present invention.
- JP-A 2001-1854 discloses an airbag wherein two panels are joined with thread sewing and a resilient adhesive having 200% or more fractural elongation so as to prevent a gas leakage from a sewed portion of the panels.
- This airbag provides greater fractural elongation, but cannot satisfy the requirements for endurance characteristics.
- U.S. Pat. No. 5,482,317 discloses an inflatable protective cushion using a fabric of nylon 66 of 50-155 dtex.
- the weight of the fabric is half or less an earlier-art airbag fabric, which is superior in the earlier -art level in view of a weight reduction, but inferior therein due to lack of mechanical characteristics of the fabric itself.
- This cushion is of a rectangular outer peripheral shape to remove sewing on the outer periphery and thus secure the pressure tightness of the cushion. It is difficult, however, to apply the cushion to complicatedly shaped bags such as side airbag.
- an object of the present invention to provide soft and lightweight side airbags having higher airtightness, smaller folded volume, and excellent endurance by means of a simple manufacturing method.
- the present invention provide generally an airbag for a motor vehicle, comprising:
- An aspect of the present invention is to provide a motor vehicle, comprising:
- FIG. 1 is a perspective view showing an embodiment of an airbag before deployment as seen from a side window;
- FIG. 2 is a sectional view taken along the line II-II in FIG. 1 ;
- FIG. 3 is a fragmentary sectional view showing a peripheral junction of the airbag
- FIG. 4 is a view similar to FIG. 3 , showing another embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 5 is a table illustrating the results of performance evaluation for Examples 1-2 and Comparative examples 1-5;
- FIG. 6 is a table similar to FIG. 5 , illustrating the results of performance evaluation for Examples 3-5 and Comparative examples 6-8.
- the side airbag comprises a fabric or cloth which forms a bag main body and is coated with thermosetting silicone with excellent heat resistance and physical properties to secure the airtightness. Due to insufficient adhesion to a textile for forming the fabric, room-temperature-vulcanizing (refer hereafter to as RTV) silicone placed on the textile surface can causes an inconvenience when carrying out continuous setting.
- RTV room-temperature-vulcanizing
- Thermosetting silicone may be of any type such as solvent type, solventless type or water-dispersion type. A typical example is addition high molecular-weight liquid silicone.
- the weight of the main-body fabric of the bag should be 200 g/m 2 or less, preferably, 150 g/m 2 or less. The weight more than 200 g/m 2 makes a weight reduction of the bag difficult.
- the cover factor (CF) given by the thickness (dtex) of yarn of a textile and the weave density (yarns/inch) thereof should be 2,000 or more, preferably, 2,000-2,600.
- the cover factor is less than 2,000, the texture becomes rough, and thus the silicone amount is increased to ensure the airtightness. This results in not only increased weight of the fabric, but possible occurrence of the textile displacement when the airbag deploys explosively, which may cause damage of junctions.
- the cover factor is more than 2,600, the textile becomes very rough and hard to reduce the folded volume.
- solventless adhesive silicone requires volatilization of solvent for a material to expand thermosetting silicone placed on the main-body fabric, leading to possible reduction in the airtightness of the fabric itself or in the adhesion to the textile for forming the fabric. Solventless silicone does not raise such problem, and is safe and sure in view of the working environment.
- Adhesive silicone should be addition or addition-based RTV silicone.
- Some addition silicones are thermosetting, which have the advantage of shorter cure time, but require a heating process.
- tiny air bubbles incorporated in a silicone layer during application can expand by heating and remain therein to degrade the airtightness at the superimposed junction and the adhesion with a coating layer of the fabric.
- condensation RTV silicone of the one-liquid type which cures by reaction with atmospheric moisture tends to be slow in cure and difficult to obtain the uniform cure degree when the application amount is great, leading to nonuniform adhesion with the fabric.
- condensation silicone is typically lower in heat resistance after cure than addition silicone.
- adhesive silicone having JIS-A hardness after cure of 20 or less, preferably, 2-15, and initial fractural elongation of 800% or more, preferably, 1,000-1,500%.
- JIS-A hardness after cure 20 or less, preferably, 2-15, and initial fractural elongation of 800% or more, preferably, 1,000-1,500%.
- the use of extremely soft silicone allows preservation of the flexibility at the junctions to obtain a reduced folded volume. With JIS-A hardness of more than 20, the flexibility becomes insufficient at the junctions, which may lead to larger folded volume.
- the initial fractural elongation of 800% or more provides an operation of alleviating an impact of a peeling force and a shearing force produced explosively upon deployment of the airbag by elongation of silicone applied to the junctions. With the initial fractural elongation of less than 800%, sufficient alleviating operation is difficult to expect.
- a ratio of an initial fractural elongation Eo (%) to a fractural elongation E (%) after 250 h treatment at 100° C. after cure is 1:0.8 or more (i.e. E/Eo ⁇ 0.8), preferably, 1:0.9 or more (i.e. E/Eo ⁇ 0.9). More preferably, the ratio E/Eo of the initial fractural elongation Eo to E after 500 h treatment at 100° C. after cure is 1:0.8 or more.
- the ratio of 1:0.8 or more (E/Eo ⁇ 0.8) allows always resilient joining of the superimposed junction of the main-body fabric to reduce an impact produced at the junctions upon abrupt deployment of the airbag.
- the present invention it is more preferable to apply not only joining with adhesive silicone, but reinforcing or thread sewing to at least part of the superimposed junction of the main-body fabric, e.g. outer peripheral junction, bag inside junctions, and periphery of an inflator mounting hole which undergo a bag internal pressure and an impact force upon deployment of the airbag. Sewing the superimposed junction with adhesive silicone interposed therein allows firm airtightness without providing a sealing compound or the like along seams and the inside of an outer seam of the sewed outer periphery after sewing.
- Adhesive silicone for joining the superimposed junction of the main-body fabric may be placed on thermosetting silicone at the junctions to have 100-1,000 g/m 2 application amount (on the basis of solid matter) or 0.1-1.2 mm application thickness. Moreover, the application amount or thickness may be the same at the whole junctions, or may be varied such that it is greater at a superimposed portion ( 4 a - 4 d in FIG. 1 ) of the main-body fabric which is apt to undergo a greater peeling force than at the peripheral junction ( 3 in FIG. 1 ).
- Any solventless addition RTV silicone is available if it satisfies the requirements on adhesion with thermosetting silicone applied on the main-body fabric, heat resistance, flexibility, and the like.
- One example of such silicone contains vinyl dimethylpolysiloxane as a main agent, hydrogen-silane-radical ( ⁇ Si—H) containing compound as a cross-linking agent, platinum compound as a curing catalyst, and the like.
- thermosetting silicone For improving the adhesion of thermosetting silicone to a textile, the surface of textile or main-body fabric may be subjected to preparation such as primer treatment and plasma processing. Moreover, for enhancing the physical properties of thermosetting silicone and the adhesion of thermosetting silicone to a textile, a textile with silicone placed may be subjected to contact or non-contact heat treatment, high-energy treatment with high frequency, electron beam or ultraviolet ray, and the like at the drying and solidifying process.
- adhesive silicone used in the present invention can be cured at the room temperature.
- adhesive silicone may be subjected to heat treatment at a low temperature of about 40-100° C. or high-energy treatment as described above.
- the adhesion of adhesive silicone to thermosetting silicone is in such a condition to produce no interface peeling between the two, but cohesive failure of adhesive silicone. Without occurrence of peeling of a coating layer from an adhesive layer even when the junctions receive an impact upon deployment of the airbag, a gas leakage from the seams can be prevented for the airbag with sewed junctions.
- the provision of excellent durability to adhesive silicone can be achieved by appropriate selection of reaction accelerator, adhesive agent, heat-resisting stabilizer, filler, and the like of the above additives.
- the filler are metallic oxides such as iron oxide and titanium oxide, hydroxide, and carbon.
- the adhesion agent are silane compounds having active group such as epoxy group, amino group, imino group, carboxyl group, mercapto group or the like, and alkyl and/or alkoxyl substituted.
- the main-body fabrics may be superimposed with thermosetting silicone surfaces opposed to each other.
- the superimposition may be carried out with two pieces of fabric or one piece of fabric folded back. In some cases, the superimposition may be carried out with the outer periphery of two pieces of fabric superimposed folded back further, or with an overlap-width-like portion of larger one of two similar-shaped pieces of fabric folded on smaller one thereof.
- any specifications of sewing can be used if it allows reinforcement of the junctions.
- yarn for forming the main-body fabric being fine, particularly, 250 dtex or less, it is preferable to carry out sewing in such a way as to satisfy the relationships of 1) 20 ⁇ T ⁇ 80 and 2) 2 ⁇ T/S ⁇ 8, where T is number count of thread, and S is number of stitches (times/cm).
- the style of stitch can be selected from various types such as lock stitch, multi-thread chain stitch, single welt stitch, overlock stitch, safety stitch, zigzag stitch, covering chain stitch, and a combination thereof in accordance with a fabric to be used, bag specifications, mounting spot, required joining strength, and the like.
- Thread used in the present invention can be selected from chemosynthestic fiber threads and industrial threads formed out of nylon 6, nylon 66, nylon 46, polyester, vinylon, aramid, carbon, glass, and the like, and in the form of spun thread, filament double-twist thread, and filament resin-finished thread.
- a fiber for forming the textile may be selected from aliphatic polyamide fiber obtained with nylon 6, nylon 66, nylon 46, nylon 610, nylon 612, copolymer, and mixture thereof; copolymerized polyamide fiber of aliphatic amine and aromatic carboxylic acid such as nylon 6T and nylon 9T; polyester fiber obtained with polyethylene terephthalate, polytrimethylene terephthalate, polybutylene terephthalate, polyethylene naphthalate, copolymer, and mixture thereof; aramid fiber obtained with paraphenylene terephthalic amide and copolymer of paraphenylene terephthal amide and aromatic ether; aromatic polyester fiber; vinylon fiber; ultrahigh-molecular-weight polyethylene fiber; fluorocarbon fiber including polytetrafluoroethylene; polysulphone fiber; polyphenylene sulfide (PPS) fiber, polyether etherketone (PEEK) fiber; polyimide fiber; polyether imide fiber; cellulosic
- a loom for manufacturing a textile can be selected from various looms for weaving ordinary industrial textiles.
- the looms are a shuttle loom, a water-jet loom (WJL), an air-jet loom (AJL), a rapier loom, and a projectile loom.
- the texture of textiles may be plain weave, mat or basket weave, twilled weave, grid or rip-stop weave, and composite weave thereof.
- the airbag according to the present invention is a side airbag for reducing an impact of an occupant in the event of side collision of motor vehicles, and particularly, a side airbag which is accommodated in the folded state in a vehicle body on the periphery of a side window, i.e. front pillar, center pillar, rear pillar, roof side rail and the like, and is deployed like a curtain in the vicinity of the side window, i.e. lower space of the roof side rail in a cabin and defined by the front pillar, the center pillar or the rear pillar, with gas issuing from an inflator in the event of side collision.
- a side window i.e. front pillar, center pillar, rear pillar, roof side rail and the like
- a reinforcing fabric for reinforcing the periphery of the inflator mounting hole and the expanding inside of the airbag may include the same textile as that of the bag, or other textile thicker than that of the bag, e.g. textile formed out of nylon 66 fiber of 940 or 470 dtex.
- the reinforcing fabric can be used in one piece or a plurality of pieces. It is noted that the reinforcing fabric involves an antiflaming fabric for intercepting hot gas issuing from the inflator.
- the reinforcing fabric may be coated with heat-resisting resin such as silicone resin or fluorine-contained resin or heat-resisting rubber, or be formed out of a heat-resisting fiber such as aramid fiber.
- the airbag according to the present invention which serves essentially as a side airbag for reducing an impact in the event of side collision, may be applied to other particular spots in the form of a headrest bag for rear-end collision, a mini-bag for children, a seat-belt bag or air belt and the like, wherein the shape and volume are determined in accordance with the requirements.
- the hardness was measured in conformity with JIS K6253.
- FIG. 5 shows a relative airtightness in each example with respect to a reference airtightness 100 in Example 1
- FIG. 6 shows a relative airtightness in each example with respect to a reference airtightness 100 in Example 3.
- FIG. 5 shows a relative thickness in each example with respect to a reference thickness 100 in Example 1
- FIG. 6 shows a relative thickness in each example with respect to a reference thickness 100 in Example 3.
- a plain weave textile was manufactured having 66 yarns/inch weave density for both warp and weft.
- the textile was boiled off and set by heat.
- one side of the textile was coated with thermosetting silicone resin (see 6 , 7 in FIGS. 3 - 4 )(SRX625BTM manufactured by Dow Corning Toray Silicone Co., Ltd.+xylene solution containing 1% catalyst, 1% pigment, and 2% reaction accelerator) by 20 g/m 2 (on the basis of solid matter), which was subjected to drying and heat treatment, obtaining a coated fabric.
- the density of the textile after coating was 68 yarns/inch for warp, and 67 yarns/inch for weft.
- the weight of the textile was 135 g/m 2 before coating, and 155 g/m 2 after coating.
- the textile was cut to obtain two pieces 1 , 2 of coated fabric roughly like a parallelogram for main-body fabric.
- the length of each piece is 160 cm for upper side, 180 cm for lower side, 65 cm for right side and 80 cm for left side, and the altitude is about 55 cm.
- An outer periphery 3 and four cocoon-like portions 4 a - 4 d of the first piece 1 were further coated with adhesive silicone 8 or addition solventless two-liquid RTV silicone (manufactured by Dow Corning Toray silicone Co., Ltd.) by 0.25 mm thickness and 25 mm width.
- the second piece 2 was placed thereon.
- the cocoon-like junctions are about 30 cm long and about 15 cm wide.
- reference numerals 5 a - 5 e designate expandable portions of the airbag.
- FIG. 5 reveals that the airbag in Example 1 is superior to a conventional airbag in Comparative example 3 in airtightness and compactness.
- Example 2 The airbag in Example 2 was manufactured and evaluated in the same way as that in Example 1 except that using yarn of 155 dtex/68 f (base yarn strength: 7.3 cN/dtex), a plain weave textile was manufactured having 92 yarns/inch weave density for both warp and weft.
- the density of the textile after coating was 95 yarns/inch for warp, and 93 yarns/inch for weft.
- the weight of the textile was 126 g/m 2 before coating, and 146 g/m 2 after coating.
- the airbag in Example 2 provides substantially the same degree of airtightness as that in Example 1, and very small folded thickness, i.e. superb compactness.
- the airbag in Comparative example 1 was manufactured and evaluated in the same way as that in Example 1 except that the main-body fabrics were joined with reactive hot-melt resin (HI-BON 4820 TM manufactured by Hitachi Kasei Polymer Co., Ltd.) in place of adhesive silicone, and were heated and pressurized at 90° C. for 2 min. under 0.5 kgf/cm 2 surface pressure.
- reactive hot-melt resin HI-BON 4820 TM manufactured by Hitachi Kasei Polymer Co., Ltd.
- the airbag in Comparative example 1 provides substantially the same folded thickness as that in Example 1, but cannot provide sufficient airtightness since the peripheral junction was peeled off at several spots before the bag internal pressure reaches 50 kpa.
- the airbag in Comparative example 2 is similar to that in Example 1, but in place of adhesive silicone, the main-body fabrics were joined by sewing the outer periphery and four junctions of the bag inside with thread of nylon 66 fiber (number count No. 8 for both needle thread and bobbin thread) at 4.0 times/cm in number of stitches.
- the outer periphery was stitched by double chain in two rows, and the bag inside was lock stitched.
- the surface of all seams and the outside of an outer seam at the outer periphery were coated with moisture-setting silicone resin (RTV rubber SH790 TM manufactured by Dow Corning Toray Co., Ltd.) to achieve filling.
- the airbag in Comparative example 3 was manufactured and evaluated in the same way as that in Example 1 except that additive thermosetting silicone (SE1700 TM manufactured by Dow Corning Toray Co., Ltd.) was used as adhesive silicone, and was cured by heat at 150° C. for 10 min.
- adhesive silicone For the characteristics of adhesive silicone after cure, the JIS-A hardness was 35, and the initial fractural elongation was 510%.
- the airbag in Comparative example 3 is slightly lower in airtightness, and slightly larger in folded thickness than the airbag in Example 1.
- the airbag in Comparative example 4 was manufactured and evaluated in the same way as that in Example 1 except that condensation RTV silicone (SE9145 TM manufactured by Dow Corning Toray Co., Ltd.) was used as adhesive silicone.
- condensation RTV silicone SE9145 TM manufactured by Dow Corning Toray Co., Ltd.
- JIS-A hardness 41
- the initial fractural elongation was 380%.
- the airbag in Comparative example 4 is lower in airtightness (the peripheral junction is peeled off at one spot in the vicinity of the mounting hole), and larger in folded thickness than the airbag in Example 1.
- a plain weave textile was manufactured having 60 yarns/inch weave density for both warp and weft.
- the textile was boiled off and set by heat.
- one side of the textile was coated with thermosetting silicone resin by 30 g/m 2 (on the basis of solid matter), which was subjected to drying and heat treatment, obtaining a coated fabric.
- the density of the textile after coating was 62 yarns/inch for both warp and weft.
- the weight of the textile was 190 g/m 2 before coating, and 220 g/m 2 after coating.
- Example 2 the textile was cut to obtain two pieces 1, 2 of coated fabric for main-body fabric.
- a coated outer periphery 3 and four cocoon-like portions 4 a - 4 d of the first piece 1 were further coated with the same adhesive silicone 8 as that in Example 1 by 0.8 mm thickness and 25 mm width.
- the second piece 2 on the side of a coated surface was placed thereon.
- Example 4 The airbag in Example 4 was manufactured and evaluated in the same way as that in Example 3 except that using yarn of 235 dtex/72 f (base yarn strength: 8.5 cN/dtex), a plain weave textile was manufactured having 73.5 yarns/inch weave density for both warp and weft, wherein adhesive silicone is of 1.0 mm coating thickness and 100° C. ⁇ 1 h cure condition, and thread number count is No. 20 for needle thread and No. 8 for bobbin thread with 5.0 times/cm in number of stitches.
- yarn of 235 dtex/72 f base yarn strength: 8.5 cN/dtex
- a plain weave textile was manufactured having 73.5 yarns/inch weave density for both warp and weft, wherein adhesive silicone is of 1.0 mm coating thickness and 100° C. ⁇ 1 h cure condition, and thread number count is No. 20 for needle thread and No. 8 for bobbin thread with 5.0 times/cm in number of stitches.
- the airbag in Example 5 was manufactured and evaluated in the same way as that in Example 3 except that addition RTV silicone (manufactured by Dow Corning Toray Co., Ltd.) is used as adhesive silicone, wherein the JIS-A hardness is 16 , and the initial fractural elongation is 1,040%.
- RTV silicone manufactured by Dow Corning Toray Co., Ltd.
- the airbag in Comparative example 6 was manufactured and evaluated in the same way as that in Example 3 except that using yarn of 470 dtex/72 f (base yarn strength: 8.6 cN/dtex), a plain weave textile was manufactured having 54 yarns/inch weave density after coating.
- the airbag in Comparative example 6 is excellent in airtightness, but large in folded thickness, i.e. low in compactness.
- the airbag in Comparative example 7 was manufactured and evaluated in the same way as that in Example 3 except that using yarn of 400 dtex/72 f (base yarn strength: 8.6 cN/dtex), a plain weave textile was manufactured having 49 yarns/inch weave density after coating.
- the airbag in Comparative example 7 is excellent in compactness but inferior in airtightness (greater gas leakage at the junctions).
- the airbag in Comparative example 8 was manufactured and evaluated in the same way as that in Example 3 except that the same condensation RTV silicone as that in Comparative example 4 was used as adhesive silicone.
- the airbag in Comparative example 8 is low in airtightness (the junctions are partly peeled off), and large in folded thickness, i.e. low in compactness.
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- Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
- Air Bags (AREA)
- Laminated Bodies (AREA)
Abstract
Description
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- two portions which form a main body of the airbag, the two portions being superimposed to have one sides opposed to each other, the two portions comprising a textile, the textile having 400 dtex or less yarn, 200 g/m2 or less weight, and 2,000 or more cover factor;
- a first silicone placed at least the one sides of the two portions, the first silicone comprising a thermosetting silicone; and
- a second silicone interposed between the two portions at a junction, the second silicone comprising a solventless addition room-temperature-setting adhesive silicone, the second silicone having 20 or less JIS-A hardness and 800% or more initial fractural elongation after cure.
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- an airbag mounted in a vicinity of a side window of the motor vehicle, the airbag comprising:
- two portions which form a main body of the airbag, the two portions being superimposed to have one sides opposed to each other, the two portions comprising a textile, the textile having 400 dtex or less yarn, 200 g/m2 or less weight, and 2,000 or more cover factor;
- a first silicone placed at least the one sides of the two portions, the first silicone comprising a thermosetting silicone; and
- a second silicone interposed between the two portions at a junction, the second silicone comprising a solventless addition room-temperature-setting adhesive silicone, the second silicone having 20 or less JIS-A hardness and 800% or more initial fractural elongation after cure.
CF=√{square root over (Dw)}×Nw+√{square root over (Df)}+Nf
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- a) Hardness (JIS-A)
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- b) Fractural elongation
Claims (27)
Applications Claiming Priority (4)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
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JP2000-242120 | 2000-08-10 | ||
JP2000242120 | 2000-08-10 | ||
JP2001185725 | 2001-06-20 | ||
JP2001-185725 | 2001-06-20 |
Publications (2)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
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US20020020992A1 US20020020992A1 (en) | 2002-02-21 |
US7537238B2 true US7537238B2 (en) | 2009-05-26 |
Family
ID=26597696
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
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US09/924,943 Expired - Lifetime US7537238B2 (en) | 2000-08-10 | 2001-08-09 | Side airbag |
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US (1) | US7537238B2 (en) |
EP (1) | EP1179454A3 (en) |
Cited By (8)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US20100015407A1 (en) * | 2006-12-06 | 2010-01-21 | Anh Be | Airbag and Process for its Assembly |
US20100109305A1 (en) * | 2008-11-04 | 2010-05-06 | Takata Corporation | Airbag and airbag apparatus |
US20100297903A1 (en) * | 2008-12-30 | 2010-11-25 | Bluestar Silicones France | Coating compositions and textile fabrics coated therewith |
US8376401B2 (en) | 2010-01-27 | 2013-02-19 | Tk Holdings Inc. | Airbag |
WO2014051385A3 (en) * | 2012-09-28 | 2014-04-24 | 코오롱인더스트리 주식회사 | Coated fabric for airbag |
US20180015706A1 (en) * | 2015-03-19 | 2018-01-18 | Zeon Corporation | Laminate for automotive interior material |
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Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
EP1179454A3 (en) | 2003-03-12 |
US20020020992A1 (en) | 2002-02-21 |
EP1179454A2 (en) | 2002-02-13 |
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